RNC Members Want To Block A Primary Challenge To Trump, But The Rules May Stop Them

Donald Trump accepts the 2016 GOP presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. Some party activists want to prevent a primary challenge to Trump in 2020.

Jim Watson
/ AFP/Getty Images

Originally published on January 4, 2019 1:45 pm

Some members of the Republican National Committee andgrassroots Republicansare backing an effort to block potential primary challengers to President Trump, even though party insiders are insisting it is too late to change the rules for the 2020 campaign.

The push to rally GOP support around the president early comes as freshman Republican Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah published aWashington Post op-ed arguing that on issues of character, "the president has not risen to the mantle of the office." The 2012 GOP nominee also said he would not run himself in 2020 and declined to endorse Trump, in an interview with CNN.

Responding to the Romney op-ed, Republican National Committee member Jevon Williams called for a change in RNC rules to prevent a costly primary challenge, which he deemed a "fantasy" that would weaken Trump's re-election prospects.

"I am asking for your support to take the unprecedented step of amending the rules to close loopholes in the re-nomination campaign," wrote Williams in a letter to fellow RNC members, first reported by The Washington Examiner and obtained by NPR.

There is an open question about whether current RNC rules allow money to be spent to support Trump's re-election if there is a contested primary for the GOP presidential nomination. This question has helped motivate those like Williams who hope to block a Trump challenger.

"The party can't spend money or resources if there is a contested primary," a longtime RNC insider argued. "They stupidly didn't amend the rules in a substantive manner from 2016, which was an open cycle."

This effort comes as some Republicans question whether to even hold a presidential primary. South Carolina Republicans have left open the question of whether they would hold a presidential primary in 2020. The state bills its contest as the "critical First in the South" primary, but some party officials are wary of exposing Trump to a challenger.

Trump enjoys enormous support among GOP voters, hovering around 90 percent approval in polls, and his endorsements during 2018 GOP primaries proved very powerful. That makes any primary challenge at this point seem like a very long shot, but a handful of figures in the party are seen as possible opponents.

Heading into a re-election campaign, Trump is facing political trouble with a new Democratic House that is preparing dozens of investigations into the president and his administration, alongside special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into 2016 election interference.

Williams' proposal received strong grassroots support from some party members across the country.

"I wholeheartedly support Jevon's resolution. President Trump needs this expression of support from his party at this time," said Marti Halverson, the RNC's national committeewoman from Wyoming.

"Any primary attempt by [Ohio Gov. John] Kasich, [former Arizona Sen. Jeff] Flake or Romney is a fool's errand. I support any move by the RNC to support President Trump and secure his nomination as early as possible," said Guy Short, a six-time national delegate to Republican conventions and a veteran of the GOP's platform and rules committees.

The proposal to change the party's rules in order to block a Trump challenger is unlikely to succeed. Republican Party rules experts say that it's too late to change the rules for the 2020 presidential nomination process.

Morton Blackwell, who has served on the RNC for 30 years as a representative from Virginia, told Williams that it was not possible to block Trump primary challenges at this time.

"I deplore the unhinged attacks on President Trump by Sen.-elect Mitt Romney, but it's too late now to change any of the 2020 Republican National Convention delegate selection rules," Blackwell said in an email to Williams, which he shared with NPR. "The Republican National Committee may not legally change any of The Rules of the Republican Party now."

In 2016, a tug of war broke out in the Republican convention rules committee, and a minority of voices in the party sought to block Trump from becoming the party's nominee at the convention in Cleveland. Two-and-a-half years later, the environment within the party is absolutely pro-Trump.

In some ways, the most notable opposition to William's rule change suggestion are those who think Trump's support is so profound that it is not necessary.

"Donald Trump will have no problem whatsoever winning a Republican primary — the base loves him ... anyone who tries to challenge him will be defeated soundly. From my standpoint, I'm not sure there's a need," said Joe Gruters, a Florida state senator and a front-runner to be the next Florida GOP chairman.

Shawn Steel, the RNC's national committeeman from California, said he didn't support Williams' effort to block Trump challengers because he feared there would be unintentional long-term consequences. But he did say that the RNC should unanimously support Trump all the same.

"If you're in the RNC right now and you don't support the president, you ought to go out the door," Steel told NPR. "The body is a political organization designed to support the president in power."

President Trump claimed some personal victories in the 2018 midterm results, and as he ticked them off at a news conference on Wednesday he might as well have been walking through the Electoral College map for 2020.